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An overview of curriculum and assessment for Students with Significant Cognitive Disabilities

An overview of curriculum and assessment for Students with Significant Cognitive Disabilities. Ohio’s Academic Content Standards – Extended Alternate Assessment Bill Nellis, consultant – bnellis@sst6.org State Support Team Region 6. Training Objectives.

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An overview of curriculum and assessment for Students with Significant Cognitive Disabilities

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  1. An overview of curriculum and assessment for Students with Significant Cognitive Disabilities Ohio’s Academic Content Standards – Extended Alternate Assessment Bill Nellis, consultant – bnellis@sst6.org State Support Team Region 6

  2. Training Objectives • Know what you must do to prepare for the Ohio AASCD administration; be familiar with the testing materials and know what is allowed and not allowed during administration. • Know how to support intervention teachers working with students with the most significant disabilities as they begin to teach from the extended academic content standards; be familiar with the format of the standards and available training resources. • The Power Point and Resources can be found at www.sst6.org > Training Archives > August 10 Auglaize ESC Administrator Meeting

  3. When Is the AASCD Administered? February 25 – March 29, 2013

  4. How Is the AASCD Administered? • The AASCD is administered in a one-on-one setting, with Test Administrators reading a script to administer tasks. • Pictures, graphics and symbols are provided for nearly all of the tasks. • The Test Administrator uses a rubric to score the student’s performance. During this training, you’ll watch a video of a teacher administering and scoring a task.

  5. Key Differences SWD Portfolio AASCD • A collection of evidence that measures a student’s performance aligned to a grade level of Ohio’s Academic Content Standards • Teacher created a portfolio that included a variety of information, such as teacher data sheets, student work, and letter(s) from family. • Evidence collected throughout the school year • Individually administered student performance assessment aligned to Ohio’s Academic Content Standards – Extended (OACS-E) that tests discrete academic skills. • AASCD is based on performance items/tasks in each content area and grade/grade band. • Specific assessment window of 5 weeks

  6. Key Differences (cont.) SWD Portfolio AASCD • Community members and parents contribute evidence of student performance. • Responsibility shared by IEP team members • Scored by trained scorers in a central location • Test Administrator administers all parts of the assessment. • Test administered by a single person • Test Administrator scoring based on accuracy of response

  7. Alternate Assessments Alternate assessments are designed for the small number of students who are unable to participate in regular grade-level state assessments even with appropriate accommodations. (IDEA 1997)

  8. Alternate Assessments • Must be aligned to the state’s content standards. • Must yield results in English Language Arts, Mathematics, Science, and Social Studies. It must be designed and implemented in a manner that supports use of results as an indicator for AYP. • Can measure progress based on alternate achievement standards ESEA (NCLB).

  9. Considerations • With the AASWD, +/- 98% of students scored proficient or above. 95% of those scored accelerated and advanced. This produced no usable measure of student performance nor growth. • The new AASCD will have a distribution of scores comparable to the general assessments and will be able to show student growth.

  10. Item Format

  11. Where Can I Find Sample Test Items? • http://www.ode.state.oh.us > Alternate Assessments > Ohio’s Alternate Assessment for Students with Significant Cognitive Disabilities (AASCD) 

  12. Video Clip Let’s watch as a task is administered. All About the Flag Bryan

  13. Participation Criteria • The assessment is new, but the participation guidelines have not changed. • The same students for whom the old assessment would be appropriate are the students for whom the new is appropriate. • Decision making framework for participation in DFAM and Rules Book.

  14. AASCD Assignment by Grade

  15. Training Requirements Every Test Administrator (generally the student’s teacher) who is employed by an Ohio school district and will administer the AASCD must attend one of the statewide training sessions.

  16. Test Security • Maintaining test security is one of your most important responsibilities. • Follow your district’s written procedures for protecting the security of test materials at all times. • Secure test materials consist of test booklets, reading passage booklets and printed manipulatives.

  17. Ethical Use of Tests Pursuant to the requirements of Amended Substitute House Bill 152 (July 1993), the State Board of Education has adopted Standards for the Ethical Use of Tests (see Ohio Administrative Code 3301-7-01).

  18. Ethical Use of Tests (cont.)

  19. Test Administrator Responsibilities • Must attenda training session • Read the Directions for Administration Manual • The TA must score and enter the student responses in the DEI.

  20. Other Preparations • Before test administration, determine whether any of the students’ assistive technology devices need special programming. • Practice. Practicing will make the test administration go more smoothly. • Consider administering the assessment first to a student with minimal challenges.

  21. Scoring Fidelity • The AASCD is administered and scored by the Test Administrator. • Fidelity of administration and scoring is monitored by using a second rater to verify, through a sampling of administrations, that all procedures were followed. • A sampling of teachers and students will participate.

  22. What Is the Second Rater Procedure? • For the teacher and student sampled, a trained teacher or other staff member (the “second rater”) observes the assessment administration. • The second rater scores the student responses at the same time as the Test Administrator and enters his or her scores in the DEI system. • The Test Administrator’s score is the official scoring record; the second rater scoring is collected to compute scoring consistency.

  23. Important Final Dates • Last day of testing is March 29, 2012. • Materials must be returned to the contractor on or before April 5, 2013.

  24. Increasing grade-level standard accessibility through high expectations for academic achievement Ohio’s Academic Content Standards - Extended

  25. A Brief Overview • No extensions to standards in the past • Students with cognitive disabilities used “applications” • Common Core and Ohio’s revised standards in Science and Social Studies offered Ohio a new opportunity • Office for Exceptional Children and Office of Curriculum, Instruction and Assessment combined efforts to write the Extended Standards

  26. Revised Academic Content Standards • New standards include • Common Core for ELA and Mathematics • Revised standards for Science and Social Studies • Model Curriculum available for each content area to help teach the new standards • For more information, visit http://education.ohio.gov and search Academic Content Standards.

  27. What Are Extended Standards? • An extension of Ohio’s Revised Academic Content Standards accessible to students with significant cognitive disabilities. • Extensions may reduce the Revised Academic Content Standards in breadth and depth to apply to those students taking an alternate assessment.

  28. Process Extensions created for grade bands • 3–5 • 6–8 • 9–12

  29. Design • Three extensions from highest to lowest complexity • Entry points to the state standard for learners at different ability levels • Must maintain the main idea or essence of the standard • Extensions will be used for instruction focused on access to general education curriculum • Basis for new Ohio Alternate Assessment (AASCD)

  30. Ohio’s Academic Content Standards – Extended (OACS-E) education.ohio.gov Key word search: extended standards

  31. How Extensions Will Be Displayed? Ohio Academic Content Standards Ohio Academic Content Standards - Extensions

  32. ELA Extensions Strand Grade Band Central ideas written to capture overall meaning of the standards within a strand of a grade band domain Three levels of complexity written for standards Topic

  33. Math Extensions Domain Grade Band Central ideas written to capture overall meaning of the standards and cluster statements within the grade band domain Three levels of complexity written for standards/clusters Use Table of Contents to code: KCC= Kindergarten, Counting and Cardinality Extensions

  34. Science Extensions Strand Grade Band Central ideas written to capture overall meaning of the content statements within a topic of a grade band Three levels of complexity written for content statements Topic Extensions

  35. Social Studies Extensions Strand Grade Band Central Ideas written to capture overall meaning of the content statements within themes Three levels of complexity written for content statements Topic Extensions

  36. OACS-E Instruction Support • Modules available on the OCALI website. Foundational topics include: • What are Extended Academic Content Standards? • General Curriculum for Students with Significant Cognitive Disabilities • Planning for Instruction and Assessment for Students with Significant Cognitive Disabilities • Additional support provided by SSTs

  37. Important Considerations • Intervention Teachers must become familiar with the extended content standards • Intervention Teachers need to be able to create thematic cross-content units of study aligned to the standards • Intervention Teachers need to incorporate the Alternate Assessment response mode in their instruction now • Intervention Teachers must modify the response mode as necessary incorporate into everyday instruction

  38. Contact Information For questions about test administration or receiving or returning materials: Ohio AASCD Help Desk 1-877-231-7809 Ohhelpdesk@air.org

  39. Contact Information Andrew Hinkle Office for Exceptional Children andrew.hinkle@education.ohio.gov (614) 466-0223

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